4.6 Article

Examination of moderators of expressive writing in patients with renal cell carcinoma: the role of depression and social support

Journal

PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 9, Pages 1361-1368

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pon.4148

Keywords

expressive writing; moderators; kidney cancer; quality of life; moderation; contraindication

Funding

  1. NCI [R01CA090966]
  2. NIH/NCIH [K01 AT007559]

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ObjectiveTo identify groups most likely to benefit from an Expressive Writing (EW) intervention, we examined psychosocial variables as intervention moderators. We hypothesized that EW would be particularly effective for participants with high levels of depressive symptoms and social support at study entry. MethodsPatients (n=277; 60.6% male) with kidney cancer were randomly assigned to either an expressive (EW) or neutral writing (NW) condition. Intervention outcomes included measures of depressive symptoms (CESD), cancer-related symptoms (MDASI), fatigue (BFI), and sleep disturbances (PSQI) assessed at baseline, 1, 4, and 10months later. Moderators were measured at baseline. ResultsAs hypothesized, depressive symptoms and social support moderated intervention efficacy. When examining both moderators simultaneously, EW appeared to be most effective in terms of cancer-related symptoms (p<0.05) and depressive symptoms (p<0.01) for participants with elevated depressive symptoms who received high levels of social support at baseline relative to their counterparts in the NW condition. Moreover, participants in EW with high levels of social support at baseline reported lower levels sleep disturbances (p=0.005) than their counterparts in NW. ConclusionsRecognition of baseline depressive symptoms and social support as intervention moderators may lead to improved patient selection for EW interventions, as EW may be particularly beneficial regarding QOL outcomes for patients that have social support available including participants with depressive symptoms. EW may not be beneficial, or potentially even contraindicated, for participants lacking social support. Copyright (c) 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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